DeSantis tells students they can take off their masks, fumes over 'COVID theater' in viral video



A short video clip showing Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis fuming over "COVID theater" and telling high school students they can remove their masks has gone viral online.

In the clip — which has already been viewed millions of times — an obviously annoyed DeSantis is seen approaching a podium where a group of masked students are standing in the backdrop of the camera shot.

"You do not have to wear those masks," he tells the students, who start to chuckle.

"I mean, please take them off," he continues. "Honestly, it's not doing anything. We've gotta stop with this COVID theater. So if you wanna wear it, fine, but this is ridiculous."

Several students responded to the governor's request by removing their masks, while at least one student chose to keep their mask on.

NEW: @GovRonDeSantis annoyed with USF students\u2014\n\n"You do not have to wear those masks. Please take them off. Honestly, it's not doing anything. We've gotta stop with this Covid theater. So if you wanna wear it, fine, but this is ridiculous."\n\nhttp://bit.ly/3vx0DaJ\u00a0 @WFLApic.twitter.com/ZIOyTHLOh3
— Evan Donovan (@Evan Donovan) 1646244994

The exchange took place Wednesday afternoon at the University of South Florida where DeSantis was scheduled to announce state funding for cybersecurity education, according to WFLA-TV, which first reported on the governor's remarks.

In a report, the outlet claimed that DeSantis "scold[ed]" the students. But the clip appears to show the governor's frustration was not aimed at the students but at the societal pressure, in general, that resulted in their wearing face coverings.

When reached for comment, DeSantis' team stood by the governor's message.

"As the governor said, ‘you can wear them if you want’ but there’s ‘no evidence’ masks make any difference," said press secretary Christina Pushaw. "That has been clear for a long time, and the data informed our state’s official guidance."

"Following Florida, the [U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] has even stopped recommending mask wearing for most Americans," Pushaw added. "After two years of mixed messages from health authorities and the media, the governor wants to make sure everyone is aware of the facts and data now, so they can feel free and comfortable without a mask."

In a statement to Fox News, Pushaw said, "The kids laughed after he said it. They knew he wasn’t frustrated with them but with the peer pressure around masking in schools."

Fox also reported that the clip immediately elicited a positive response from some conservative commentators online.

Outkick's Clay Travis tweeted, "This is phenomenal" while his fellow radio host Buck Sexton added, "This is the correct attitude toward mask wearing."

This is phenomenal. Ron Desantis tells USF kids they don\u2019t have to wear their masks because they don\u2019t do anything and it\u2019s time to stop with all the political theater.pic.twitter.com/o8xGzyKXcV
— Clay Travis (@Clay Travis) 1646247479
This is the correct attitude toward mask wearinghttps://twitter.com/wfla/status/1499086747849928711\u00a0\u2026
— Buck Sexton (@Buck Sexton) 1646247607

A day ahead of Biden's SOTU address, New York Times editorial board suddenly says it's the 'right time' to end school mask mandates



The New York Times editorial board declared this week that it's the "right time" to end all school mask mandates — a day ahead of President Joe Biden's first ever State of the Union address.

What are the details?

The board on Monday said they believed it was the "right time" to end mask mandates inside schools following the announcement of New York City Mayor Eric Adams that all mask mandates would be lifted by March 7 so long as case counts remained low.

Adams also announced future plans to rescind the vaccine requirement for public spaces such as bars, gyms, movie theaters, restaurants, and more.

"[W]ith full vaccination rates in the city at 78 percent and the latest surge clearly passed, this is the right time to lift the requirement for masks in schools," the editorial board said in its Monday essay. "It’s a lot to ask young children to wear masks for several hours a day, especially when so many adults seem to struggle with it."

The board added that as case counts are remaining steadily low, "now is as good a time as any to test the waters."

The board continued lauding New York City's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, and said that the city — and its state — can now "be a model and set an example" for other regions considering lifting COVID-19-related mandates — except, of course, for vaccine-related requirements.

"Once the COVID-19 vaccines win full F.D.A. approval (as opposed to emergency authorization) for younger children, city and state officials should make the shots mandatory for all public school students, just as they already do for measles, mumps, rubella, and a host of other once-devastating diseases," the essay continued. "The past two years have taught us that there is no foolproof metric for when to impose which safety measures, or when to lift them. Our technology advances, the virus evolves, and public willingness to change behavior shifts over time."

The board concluded its essay, "This virus is not going away anytime soon, as so many experts have warned. But New York is no longer in the acute phase of this crisis. We have vaccines, the promise of new medications, hard-won expertise in treating COVID-19 and a strong baseline of immunity in the population. There will never be a perfect moment to step into the next chapter of this pandemic. But at some point, we have to try moving forward. There are smart ways to do that right now, and the mayor is wise to embrace them."

Video allegedly shows public HS school teacher forcibly removing student from classroom for not wearing mask — and observers want heads to roll



A video circulating on social media allegedly shows a public school teacher forcibly removing a student from a classroom for not wearing a mask.

What are the details?

The short clip shows a masked, apparently bald man grab an unmasked male student from behind in a bear hug and walk him out of the room, intermittently lifting him off the floor in the process, until they're both through the doorway.

Masked students seated at tables laugh at the scene as the student being carried out of the room appears to utter unintelligible phrases.

Check it out:

Teacher at @AVUSD forcibly removes a student from the classroom for not wearing a maskpic.twitter.com/S5vVuAGLlU
— Libs of Tik Tok (@Libs of Tik Tok) 1645659037

What did the school district have to say?

The Apple Valley Unified School District — which is about 50 minutes north of San Bernardino in southern California — said in a Facebook statement Wednesday that it's "been made aware of a video circulating on social media of a student and staff member at [Apple Valley High School]. At this time, AVUSD is investigating the incident and appropriate outside agencies have been notified. All investigations are confidential. We cannot comment on active investigations. Appropriate actions will be taken based on the California Penal Code and/or Education Code violations."

Anything else?

The HD Daily News out of Hesperia, which about 20 minutes southwest of Apple Valley, reported that social media has indicated the teacher removed the student because the district mandates that masks must be worn in classrooms.

The Daily News on Thursday said the district released a statement noting that students who refuse to wear masks indoors aren't allowed indoors. In addition, the outlet — citing the district's statement on masks — said such students have been given an outdoor environment where they can complete assigned classwork. The statement also indicated that if students are defiant, the district encourages students to comply, the Daily News added.

What did observers have to say?

Interestingly, the Apple Valley school district's Facebook statement on the video limits who could comment on it (read: there are no comments), so folks simply commented underneath an unrelated post from last Friday — and they weren't happy:

  • "Sad as a school you have to turn off public comments," one user said. "[Who's] in charge of this animal house? Child abuse, much?"
  • "Thug teacher physically assaults student, film at 11," another commenter noted.
  • "Seriously thinking of removing my children from the district! " another commenter wrote. "This is going too far! Stop forcing masks already!"
  • "Enough is enough," another commenter declared. "The way the kids are treated at the high school is an ongoing issue I’ve taken up with ... [Principal Brian] Goodrow multiple times. I’m so sick and tired [of] these kids not being protected."
  • And a Twitter user commenting on the video said, "That’s a lawsuit right there. Teachers can’t be bothered to stop a fight where one student is killing another but looooord, don’t let me catch you not wearing a mask. Lolol. What a joke these teachers are. I hope he gets sued."

California school district caves after students demonstrate against masks during mass walkout



Hundreds of students at a California school walked out of class on Tuesday afternoon in protest of their district's continued mask mandate despite statewide requirements being relaxed.

The walkout, according to reports, was in protest of the delay in lifting mask mandates at schools across California.

Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) was expected to lift the mandate on Monday, but Dr. Mark Ghaly — California's Health and Human Services Secretary — said there would be a two-week delay in order to monitor case counts.

What are the details?

According to Fox News, students assembled outside Oak Ridge High School in El Dorado Hills, California, on Tuesday and demanded the district remove its indoor mask mandate.

Later that day, the El Dorado Union High School District announced that it would be changing mask protocols and would not enforce an indoor mandate by excluding students from school.

"The enforcement of masking will be done by educating students and asking them to mask but no further actions of exclusion from class will be taken," the district said a statement obtained by the outlet. "Moving forward students will not be physically removed from the classroom or receive a discipline consequence to prevent further exclusionary learning loss."

Earlier this week, California began the process of revoking indoor mask mandates. As of Tuesday, vaccinated Californians were able to remove masks in most indoor settings save for schools and other areas that are considered high-risk for transmission.

Fox News reported that unvaccinated people "will still be required to wear masks indoors, and everyone — vaccinated or not — will have to wear masks in higher-risk settings like public transit and nursing homes."

Local governments are permitted to enforce their own indoor mask requirements.

The Washington Examiner reported that while the mask mandate is still in effect at California public schools, some schools have noted to defy state orders and make in-school masks optional.

Wow! Hundreds of kids walked out at Oak Ridge, a @myedhs1 high school, protesting school mask mandates. Dr. Ghaly & @GavinNewsom have started one serious #MaskRevolt in California.pic.twitter.com/4cFw4P2SSc
— Reopen California Schools (@Reopen California Schools) 1644962373

What else is there to know about this?

Jennifer Yoder, an Oak Ridge parent, told the outlet that she and other parents sent their kids to school without masks.

"This was a homegrown thing between the parents and then the kids working together to get everyone on board," Yoder said, and noted that the children who arrived maskless were dismissed.

"It just kept growing and growing. And then they eventually just got up and left those classrooms and ran outside and started their protest," Yoder said.

Video: Security guards forcibly remove maskless man from school board meeting



Security guards at a school in Webster, New York, forcibly removed a man not wearing a mask from a school board meeting this week, according to a video posted online.

In the video, posted to Facebook Tuesday by the account ROC for Educational Freedom Public Page, a security guard can be seen approaching an unmasked man sitting quietly in the back row of the meeting room while someone is speaking up front.

The two men briefly exchange words, though it's not clear what is said, and then the guard proceeds to drag the man toward the back of the room by pulling on the back of his chair. When that doesn't work, the guard grabs the man's jacket collar and pulls on that, eventually pulling the jacket off of the man's back.

At that point, the man turns around to complain as the woman recording the video shouts, "What are you doing?! What are you doing?! Holy crap. Holy crap."

Another woman can be heard exclaiming, "Is this how you treat our children, too? Do you put your hands on the children like that, too?"

When the man attempts to sit back down in his chair, the masked security guard reaches for the chair's base and tips it over until the man is forced out of the seat. Other security guards can then be seen taking hold of the man and shoving him out of the meeting room.

As the man is removed, a police officer appears to calmly follow after the group toward the back exit.

The incident was first reported by the Daily Wire.

Content warning: rough language

ROC for Educational Freedom Public Page claimed in the caption of its post that the man was a father in the community, though that information has not been confirmed. At this point, it remains unclear as to whether or not the incident was genuine or staged.

TheBlaze attempted to reach Webster Central School District for more information on the alleged incident,but the district has yet to respond. This article will be updated if and when the district provides a statement.

New York Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul announced Wednesday an end to mask mandates for indoor gatherings; however, the state leader said mask requirements would remain in place for schools, at least for the time being.

Maryland county's public schools CEO indicates students will wear masks until COVID 'no longer exists'



Prince George's County Public Schools CEO Monica Goldson has indicated that students will remain masked on school property and inside classrooms until COVID "no longer exists."

What are the details?

According to WTOP-FM, Goldson has said that she isn't "thinking about a maskless classroom."

"The only classroom I’ve been thinking about is one where teaching and learning takes places from the time the kids walk in until the time they leave," she said, WTOP reported. "The only off-ramp I want is the one where COVID no longer exists. I don’t think that that off-ramp will exist. I think this is how our life will be ... and we’re showing that we’re adaptable and we can make whatever necessary changes so that we can keep our students learning and safe."

Prince George's County Public Schools in December went to all-virtual learning until Jan. 18 when the Maryland district's 110,000 students returned to the classroom.

District leaders are now asking parents to voluntarily upload weekly COVID-19 test results for their children through February.

"Today was the first day where students and parents were back in schools after utilizing [tests]," Goldson added. "We had over 85,000 tests uploaded into our database and just a few students who tested positive. So as far as I’m concerned, that’s positive, because I never want those sick kids around other students and continue to infect them."

A spokesperson for the district told Fox News on Wednesday that the district remains "hopeful" for a time when coronavirus no longer impacts learning.

"We remain hopeful for a time when COVID-19 is no longer an issue and does not impact our day-to-day operations. However, based on recent updates from health professionals including Chief Medical Advisor Dr. Fauci, we may never reach a point where there are no Coronavirus cases," the spokesperson said. "PGCPS will continue to make health and safety decisions, including the wearing of masks, in collaboration with our County health partners and after review of CDC guidance. For now, the data tells us that continued mask-wearing in our schools and offices is necessary. Our mask requirement will remain in place."

Prince George's County Executive Angela Alsobrooks added that the masks in classrooms and across campuses are of utmost importance.

"The masks have been our best way of keeping all of us safe, and until and unless we hear otherwise from our health professionals, we’re going to continue to stay the course," Alsobrooks said. "We’ll see what the science says, and we’ll follow it, and if the science says at some point it is safe for us to remove the mask we’ll do that, but otherwise, we’re in no hurry to do anything that jeopardizes the health of our students."

Mom 'furious' after teacher taped masks to multiple 4th-grade students' faces: Report



The mother of a fourth-grade student in Las Vegas, Nevada is fuming after a substitute teacher reportedly taped a mask to her son's face after he mistakenly took it off during class.

What are the details?

The mother, who wished not to be identified, spoke at length about the alleged incident in an interview with KVVU-TV over the weekend. She has since filed a police report and is calling for the teacher's resignation.

"I was furious, furious. I was scared for my son on what kind of long-term effect it is going to have on him socially, the fact that the entire class was laughing," the mother said, noting that her 9-year-old son's failure to wear the mask properly was just an honest mistake.

"He went to get a sip of water, forgot to put the mask on," she said.

But rather than reminding him to put the mask back on or even sending him to the principal's office, the teacher allegedly dragged him in front of the whole class and then applied the tape.

Mom says substitute teacher taped mask to son's face www.youtube.com

"The teacher did not tell him to put it back on or send him to the office, she instead pulled him up in front of the classroom in front of all of the students and she then taped the mask across the top of his face," the mother continued, adding that the teacher applied a second layer of tape from his nose to his forehead.

With the tape still on his face, her son was then allegedly sent to the office to pick up homework. While he was there, an alarmed administrator took notice, prompting the school's principal to go to the classroom and investigate. When the principal arrived, she reportedly discovered another student with tape on their face.

What else?

The mother told KVVU that her son said the face mask taping has gone on regularly since the beginning of the semester and that at least 5 other students have experienced it.

In a statement to the news outlet, Clark County School District said: "The district is aware of the isolated incident and is dealing with the employee through the proper channels. The principal proactively notified the family of the investigation."

CCSD has a mask mandate in place for the 2021-2022 school year that requires all students over the age of 2 to wear face masks while indoors and on school buses, regardless of vaccination status.

The mother insisted she didn't mind the mandate but argued young students should be given grace and not be publicly embarrassed for forgetting to wear masks.

"It's crazy," she complained, adding, "Corporal punishment in schools should not be happening."

She is now reportedly considering moving her son to a different public school, or potentially a charter school.

Study finds mask mandates have no substantial effect on slowing COVID-19 spread



With students finally headed back to school for the fall, debate is raging nationwide over whether K-12 children should be required to wear face masks to reduce the spread of COVID-19. But a peer-reviewed study suggests that mask use and requirements during the pandemic had no substantial impact on reducing the spread of the virus.

Researchers from the University of Louisville examined COVID-19 case growth and mask use in the United States, comparing states with mask mandates to states without, and found that "mask mandates and use likely did not affect COVID-19 case growth."

"For our study, we wanted to determine if effects of mask mandates and use were observable in the general population," Dr. Damian Guerra, an assistant professor of biology at the University of Louisville, said. "Essentially, did the theory of mask effectiveness hold up on a population-wide level?"

Guerra observed that given the widespread adoption of mask requirements as a COVID-19 mitigation strategy, there was a need to evaluate the effectiveness of that policy. He told TheBlaze in an email that previous studies on mask-wearing using case studies, mannequin experiments, or theoretical models had produced conflicting results, but his study used states without mask mandates as a control group to better gauge the effectiveness of the policy.

The results contradict the popular belief that mask mandates effectively reduce the spread of COVID-19.

"It appears that mandates and typical mask use among the public have no substantial impact on COVID-19 growth," Guerra said. "Early in the pandemic (Summer 2020), there was an association between lower infection rates and mask mandates and use. However, this association disappeared when transmission levels rose despite increased mask use in the Fall and Winter.

"While growth rates did decline in states after mask mandates became effective, rates declined to a similar degree in states without mandates," he added.

Mask-wearing is an issue that has become controversial and politicized, with heated arguments between those who support mandates and those against. According to a recent Axios/Ipsos poll, a majority of 69% of Americans support mask mandates in schools, but opinion is sharply divided by political ideology. Democrats overwhelmingly support requiring masks in schools (92%) while just 44% of Republicans support mask mandates.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that anyone who is not vaccinated against COVID-19 and is older than age 2 should wear a mask in indoor public spaces.

The Delta variant of the coronavirus, which has proved to be more contagious than previous variants, is fueling fears that unmasked students and school faculty, even those who are vaccinated, could spread disease rapidly and endanger children who may be vulnerable to the virus, such as those with pre-existing health conditions or weaker immune systems. In response and in accordance with guidance from the CDC, states like New York have implemented mandatory mask requirements for students, staff, and visitors inside school buildings, with the goal of reducing risk of spreading the virus.

However, some concerned parents have objected to requiring their children to wear masks. In the United States, the average length of the school day is 6.64 hours. These parents are worried that requiring their children to wear face masks for that prolonged period indoors can be unsanitary, have negative effects on mental health and development, and put children at an increased risk of hypercapnia from exhaling and then inhaling CO2. In response to their concerns, Republican governors in eight states have taken steps to prohibit local school districts from implementing mask requirements without giving parents the ability to opt their kids out.

Asked about the risks versus the benefits of mask-wearing, Guerra said his study coheres with earlier randomized control trials that did not find surgical masks to lower probability of COVID-19 infection.

"Simulations with mannequins and theoretical calculations also support this, as virus-containing aerosols efficiently escape from masks that are not fitted respirators. Aerosols would presumably accumulate to a steady state level in congregant settings to enable infection levels like those in non-masked settings," he explained.

"However, this process is time dependent, so it is possible that a simple surgical or cloth mask could offer some protection in a passing encounter of short duration. For workplaces or schools, where people congregate for hours at a time, you would expect much less protection."

Guerra added that some studies have shown N95-type masks are much more effective than surgical or cloth masks at reducing virus spread, "but only when properly fitted and undamaged." The CDC currently says Americans should not buy N95 respirators, that they should be reserved for health care workers.

As for the risks, Guerra said there are both known and potential harms in frequent masking.

"Surgical or cloth masks are safe for most people for short periods of time. However, chronic use is associated with enhanced susceptibility to skin barrier breakdown due to pH changes in facial skin. This can promote subsequent infection by bacteria," he explained.

"Repeatedly taking off and putting on the same mask, touching a mask with unwashed hands, or wearing a used mask increase the likelihood of upper respiratory tract infections," he added, noting that health care workers have reported greater fatigue, headaches, and psychological stress from mask-wearing. The study also notes that masks can "interfere with social learning in children."

The best methods for reducing spread of COVID-19 are "vaccination, improved building ventilation, and freely available N95-type respirators for high-risk individuals."

"Children younger than 12 are not yet eligible for vaccination, but the risk of serious COVID-19 illness in children is lower than the risk of serious flu illness," Guerra said. "For reference, less than 0.1% of COVID-19 deaths are children. For higher risk adults and children, N95-type respirators could be made freely available and social distancing encouraged. In addition, people should be encouraged to stay home if they have respiratory symptoms and/or a positive SARS-COV-2 PCR test."

Guerra emphasized that his study is "not a comprehensive referendum on all masks in all scenarios."

"Theoretical and mannequin studies suggest that mask efficacy against viral pathogens is influenced by multiple factors, including respiratory fluence rates, viral load and contagiousness, exposure time, and mask type," he said, adding that "N95-type respirators (KN95, R95, P95, etc.) can filter viral aerosols, whereas surgical and cloth masks do not."

"Surgical and cloth masks may offer marginal protection during short duration encounters with low viral loads by slowing droplet emission, but the probability of infection is already low in these instances. For longer duration encounters and/or congregant settings where aerosols tend to accumulate, surgical and cloth masks are considerably less effective."

Florida judge blocks DeSantis' ban on mask mandates in schools



A Florida judge ruled Friday that school districts in the state can require students to wear masks. The ruling overturns the executive order that Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed to ban mask mandates.

The ruling stemmed from a lawsuit brought by parents who railed against DeSantis' ban on schools forcing mandatory masks. The order signed by the Republican governor on July 30 gave parents the final decision to determine whether they want their children to wear face masks at school or not.

After a three-day virtual hearing, Leon County Circuit Judge John Cooper ruled that DeSantis' order "is without legal authority" and is by definition "arbitrary" and "capricious."

"I conclude that this evidence demonstrates that facemask policies that follow CDC guidance are, at this point in time, reasonable and consistent with the best scientific and medical and public opinion guidance at this time," Cooper said, according to WJXT. "I am enforcing the bill passed by the Legislature and requiring that anyone who uses that bill has to follow all of the provisions, not some of the provisions."

The Centers of Disease Control and Prevention currently "recommends universal indoor masking for all teachers, staff, students, and visitors to K-12 schools, regardless of vaccination status."

"The actions of the defendants (DeSantis) do not pass constitutional muster," Cooper said. "They seek to deprive the school boards in advance."

The Tallahassee judge cited two Florida Supreme Court decisions from 1914 and 1939 that ruled that individual rights are limited by their impact on the rights of others, CBS News reported. Cooper used examples stating that adults have the right to drink alcohol, but are prohibited from driving while intoxicated. Another example given is people have a right to free speech, but are not allowed to threaten others.

"We don't have that right because exercising the right in that way is harmful or potentially harmful to other people," Cooper said, adding that the law "is full of examples of rights that are limited (when) the good of others ... would be adversely affected by those rights."

During a news conference on Thursday, DeSantis said if the ban on mask mandates were overruled that he would appeal the decision.

"If we win in ... trial court I'm sure it'll be appealed on the other side, too. And so that's good, I mean, I think you know, we obviously need to have this stuff crystallize," DeSantis said, according to WKMG-TV. "We feel that the legislature really made a big statement with their parental Bill of Rights and that's an important piece of legislation."

DeSantis believes that parents in favor of being given a choice of masking their children or not will file a separate lawsuit opposing school mask mandates.

"I know there's parents who had their rights taken away, who are going to pursue legal action. I think you will see that in some areas," DeSantis added.

At least 10 county school boards have voted to defy DeSantis and institute mask mandates in Florida classrooms regardless of parental consent, including the two largest school districts in the state.

Earlier this month, Florida's Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran sent letters to the superintendents and school board chairs of districts in Alachua, Leon, and Broward counties threatening to withhold their funding.